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Eventus Security Highlights AI and Identity-Centric Security as Future of Cyber Defence
The findings point to the convergence of AI-powered automation, continuous threat exposure management, intelligence-led operations, identity-centric security, and platform consolidation into a new generation of integrated security operating models. Eventus Security announced the release of its Security Operations Market Outlook 2026, a new research report examining the technology, operational and architectural shifts reshaping enterprise cyber defence. Drawing on three consecutive years of security operations research and market analysis, the report concludes that security operations is entering its most significant period of transformation in more than a decade. The findings point to the convergence of AI-powered automation, continuous threat exposure management, intelligence-led operations, identity-centric security, and platform consolidation into a new generation of integrated security operating models. One of the report's clearest findings is that organisations are moving away from fragmented security architectures built around dozens of disconnected tools and toward integrated platforms that unify detection, investigation, response, automation, threat intelligence and exposure management within a single operating model. "The security operations market is reaching an inflection point," said Manish Chasta, Co-founder and CTO, Eventus Security. "As cyber threats become more sophisticated and security environments more fragmented, organisations are recognising that simply adding more point solutions doesn't necessarily improve security outcomes. The future of Security Operations lies in intelligent, integrated operating models that combine visibility, AI-driven analytics, automation, and response into a unified security ecosystem." The report identifies Integrated SOC Systems (ISOC) as an emerging operating model that unifies detection, investigation, response, automation and security content within a single platform. It also highlights growing adoption of Security Data Lakes, Detection Engineering Automation Solutions (DEAS) and Continuous Threat Exposure Management (CTEM), alongside increasing demand for contextual threat intelligence and Identity Threat Detection and Response (ITDR). "The cybersecurity industry is entering a new phase of maturity. Security leaders are no longer evaluating AI based on promise alone. They expect clear evidence that AI improves detection accuracy, reduces analyst fatigue, accelerates response, and delivers measurable business outcomes. That shift is raising the bar for technology providers and redefining what organisations expect from modern security operations." Manish added. Beyond technology adoption, the report notes that security operations decisions are becoming increasingly linked to business performance. Rising attack surface complexity, growing data volumes, persistent skills shortages, and pressure to optimise security spending are driving organisations to reassess how security operations should be designed, delivered, and measured. The report also emphasises the need for AI accountability, with organisations demanding measurable outcomes such as improved analyst productivity, faster response times, and stronger security outcomes. Additionally, Continuous Threat Exposure Management (CTEM) should be treated as an ongoing operational discipline, supported by continuous validation, prioritisation, remediation, and measurement to strengthen cyber resilience. The Security Operations Market Outlook 2026 is designed to help CISOs, CIOs, security operations leaders, risk professionals, boards, and enterprise technology decision-makers better understand the structural changes occurring across the cybersecurity landscape and prepare for the next generation of cyber defence.
[2]
Eventus Security Identifies the Next Era of Security Operations
The Security Operations Market Outlook 2026 highlights platform consolidation, AI accountability, continuous threat exposure management and identity-centric security as the defining trends shaping the future of cyber defence. Eventus Security today announced the release of its Security Operations Market Outlook 2026, a new research report examining the technology, operational and architectural shifts reshaping enterprise cyber defence. Drawing on three consecutive years of security operations research and market analysis, the report concludes that security operations is entering its most significant period of transformation in more than a decade. The findings point to the convergence of AI-powered automation, continuous threat exposure management, intelligence-led operations, identity-centric security, and platform consolidation into a new generation of integrated security operating models. One of the report's clearest findings is that organisations are moving away from fragmented security architectures built around dozens of disconnected tools and toward integrated platforms that unify detection, investigation, response, automation, threat intelligence and exposure management within a single operating model. "The security operations market is reaching an inflection point," said Manish Chasta, Co-founder and CTO, Eventus Security. "As cyber threats become more sophisticated and security environments more fragmented, organisations are recognising that simply adding more point solutions doesn't necessarily improve security outcomes. The future of Security Operations lies in intelligent, integrated operating models that combine visibility, AI-driven analytics, automation, and response into a unified security ecosystem." The report identifies Integrated SOC Systems (ISOC) as an emerging operating model that unifies detection, investigation, response, automation and security content within a single platform. It also highlights growing adoption of Security Data Lakes, Detection Engineering Automation Solutions (DEAS) and Continuous Threat Exposure Management (CTEM), alongside increasing demand for contextual threat intelligence and Identity Threat Detection and Response (ITDR). "The cybersecurity industry is entering a new phase of maturity. Security leaders are no longer evaluating AI based on promise alone. They expect clear evidence that AI improves detection accuracy, reduces analyst fatigue, accelerates response, and delivers measurable business outcomes. That shift is raising the bar for technology providers and redefining what organisations expect from modern security operations." Manish added. Beyond technology adoption, the report notes that security operations decisions are becoming increasingly linked to business performance. Rising attack surface complexity, growing data volumes, persistent skills shortages, and pressure to optimise security spending are driving organisations to reassess how security operations should be designed, delivered, and measured. The report outlines four strategic priorities for security leaders Organisations should focus on consolidating security architectures rather than simply reducing the number of tools, ensuring that security functions operate within a unified operating model. As Integrated SOC platforms, Security Data Lakes, and AI-driven capabilities mature, enterprises should reassess their long-term security operations strategies to align with evolving security requirements. The report also emphasises the need for AI accountability, with organisations demanding measurable outcomes such as improved analyst productivity, faster response times, and stronger security outcomes. Additionally, Continuous Threat Exposure Management (CTEM) should be treated as an ongoing operational discipline, supported by continuous validation, prioritisation, remediation, and measurement to strengthen cyber resilience. The Security Operations Market Outlook 2026 is designed to help CISOs, CIOs, security operations leaders, risk professionals, boards, and enterprise technology decision-makers better understand the structural changes occurring across the cybersecurity landscape and prepare for the next generation of cyber defence.
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Eventus Security released its Security Operations Market Outlook 2026, identifying the most significant transformation in enterprise cyber defense in over a decade. The report highlights convergence of AI-powered automation, continuous threat exposure management, identity-centric security, and platform consolidation into integrated security operating models that unify detection, investigation, and response.
Eventus Security has released its Security Operations Market Outlook 2026, a research report built on three consecutive years of market analysis that identifies security operations entering its most significant transformation period in more than a decade
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. The findings reveal a convergence of AI-powered automation, continuous threat exposure management, intelligence-led operations, identity-centric security, and platform consolidation reshaping enterprise cyber defense into integrated security operating models1
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Source: DT
One of the clearest findings shows organisations abandoning fragmented security architectures built around dozens of disconnected tools in favor of integrated platforms that unify detection, investigation, response, automation, threat intelligence, and exposure management within a single operating model
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. Manish Chasta, Co-founder and CTO at Eventus Security, stated that "the security operations market is reaching an inflection point" as cyber threats become more sophisticated and security environments more fragmented1
. He emphasized that simply adding more point solutions doesn't necessarily improve security outcomes, with the future lying in intelligent, integrated operating models that combine visibility, AI-driven analytics, automation, and response into a unified security ecosystem2
.The Security Operations Market Outlook 2026 identifies Integrated SOC Systems (ISOC) as an emerging operating model that unifies detection, investigation, response, automation, and security content within a single platform
1
. The report also highlights growing adoption of Security Data Lakes, Detection Engineering Automation Solutions (DEAS), and CTEM, alongside increasing demand for contextual threat intelligence and Identity Threat Detection and Response (ITDR)2
. These technologies represent a shift toward more comprehensive, data-driven approaches to cyber defense that address rising attack surface complexity and growing data volumes1
.Related Stories
The cybersecurity industry is entering a new phase of maturity where security leaders no longer evaluate AI based on promise alone, according to Chasta
2
. Organisations now expect clear evidence that AI improves detection accuracy, reduces analyst fatigue, accelerates response, and delivers measurable business outcomes. This shift is raising the bar for technology providers and redefining expectations from modern security operations1
. The report emphasizes AI accountability with organisations demanding measurable outcomes such as improved analyst productivity, faster response times, and stronger security outcomes2
.The report outlines four strategic priorities for addressing the evolving landscape. Organisations should focus on consolidating security architectures rather than simply reducing the number of tools, ensuring security functions operate within a unified operating model
2
. As Integrated SOC platforms, Security Data Lakes, and AI-driven capabilities mature, enterprises should reassess their long-term security operations strategies to align with evolving requirements. Additionally, continuous threat exposure management should be treated as an ongoing operational discipline, supported by continuous validation, prioritisation, remediation, and measurement to strengthen cyber resilience1
. Security operations decisions are becoming increasingly linked to business performance, with persistent skills shortages and pressure to optimize security spending driving organisations to reassess how security operations should be designed, delivered, and measured2
. The Security Operations Market Outlook 2026 is designed to help CISOs, CIOs, security operations leaders, risk professionals, boards, and enterprise technology decision-makers understand structural changes across the cybersecurity landscape and prepare for the next generation of cyber defense1
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